
Marsh half-century in vain again, as Lucknow lose again
Mitch Marsh has signed off from the Indian Premier League with another half-century, and combined in a blistering 152-run partnership in 77 balls with Rishabh Pant, but Justin Langer's Lucknow Super Giants still lost to Royal Challengers Bengaluru.
The result meant RCB finished second in the regular season and earned a place in the qualifier play-off, where they will play Ricky Ponting's Punjab Kings, rather than the eliminator.
LSG's expensively-recruited captain Pant, whose form has been dreadful, made an unbeaten 118 off 61 balls and Marsh 67 off 37 as the home team piled up 3-227.
But RCB knocked off the runs with six wickets and eight balls to spare, achieving the third-highest run-chase in IPL history with 4-230.
After Virat Kohli's 54 off 30 balls set the platform Jitesh Sharma blasted RCB to victory with 85 not out off 33 balls. New Zealand's Will O'Rouke's four overs cost 74 runs, for two wickets, two short of Jofra Archer's unwanted record for the IPL's most expensive bowling.
RCB reached the target without Tim David, who is nursing an injury sustained while fielding last week. They were also without their leading wicket-taker Josh Hazlewood, despite it being predicted pre-match that he would play having returned from having treatment for a shoulder issue in Australia.
It is not clear why he was omitted, nor whether he and David will be available for the qualifier on Thursday (local time, 0000 Friday AEST). "Hazlewood will perhaps play in the knockout," said stand-in captain Jitesh.
The qualifier is in New Chandigarh, Punjab's home ground, but since RCB have won all their away fixtures this season that will not trouble them.
The victor will go straight into Tuesday's final while the loser will face the winner of Friday's eliminator between Gujurat Titans and Mumbai Indians on Sunday.
LSG have long been out of contention, finishing seventh, but Marsh ended the campaign with six fifties and a century, scoring 627 runs at 48.23 and a strike-rate of 163.70.
Mitch Marsh has signed off from the Indian Premier League with another half-century, and combined in a blistering 152-run partnership in 77 balls with Rishabh Pant, but Justin Langer's Lucknow Super Giants still lost to Royal Challengers Bengaluru.
The result meant RCB finished second in the regular season and earned a place in the qualifier play-off, where they will play Ricky Ponting's Punjab Kings, rather than the eliminator.
LSG's expensively-recruited captain Pant, whose form has been dreadful, made an unbeaten 118 off 61 balls and Marsh 67 off 37 as the home team piled up 3-227.
But RCB knocked off the runs with six wickets and eight balls to spare, achieving the third-highest run-chase in IPL history with 4-230.
After Virat Kohli's 54 off 30 balls set the platform Jitesh Sharma blasted RCB to victory with 85 not out off 33 balls. New Zealand's Will O'Rouke's four overs cost 74 runs, for two wickets, two short of Jofra Archer's unwanted record for the IPL's most expensive bowling.
RCB reached the target without Tim David, who is nursing an injury sustained while fielding last week. They were also without their leading wicket-taker Josh Hazlewood, despite it being predicted pre-match that he would play having returned from having treatment for a shoulder issue in Australia.
It is not clear why he was omitted, nor whether he and David will be available for the qualifier on Thursday (local time, 0000 Friday AEST). "Hazlewood will perhaps play in the knockout," said stand-in captain Jitesh.
The qualifier is in New Chandigarh, Punjab's home ground, but since RCB have won all their away fixtures this season that will not trouble them.
The victor will go straight into Tuesday's final while the loser will face the winner of Friday's eliminator between Gujurat Titans and Mumbai Indians on Sunday.
LSG have long been out of contention, finishing seventh, but Marsh ended the campaign with six fifties and a century, scoring 627 runs at 48.23 and a strike-rate of 163.70.
Mitch Marsh has signed off from the Indian Premier League with another half-century, and combined in a blistering 152-run partnership in 77 balls with Rishabh Pant, but Justin Langer's Lucknow Super Giants still lost to Royal Challengers Bengaluru.
The result meant RCB finished second in the regular season and earned a place in the qualifier play-off, where they will play Ricky Ponting's Punjab Kings, rather than the eliminator.
LSG's expensively-recruited captain Pant, whose form has been dreadful, made an unbeaten 118 off 61 balls and Marsh 67 off 37 as the home team piled up 3-227.
But RCB knocked off the runs with six wickets and eight balls to spare, achieving the third-highest run-chase in IPL history with 4-230.
After Virat Kohli's 54 off 30 balls set the platform Jitesh Sharma blasted RCB to victory with 85 not out off 33 balls. New Zealand's Will O'Rouke's four overs cost 74 runs, for two wickets, two short of Jofra Archer's unwanted record for the IPL's most expensive bowling.
RCB reached the target without Tim David, who is nursing an injury sustained while fielding last week. They were also without their leading wicket-taker Josh Hazlewood, despite it being predicted pre-match that he would play having returned from having treatment for a shoulder issue in Australia.
It is not clear why he was omitted, nor whether he and David will be available for the qualifier on Thursday (local time, 0000 Friday AEST). "Hazlewood will perhaps play in the knockout," said stand-in captain Jitesh.
The qualifier is in New Chandigarh, Punjab's home ground, but since RCB have won all their away fixtures this season that will not trouble them.
The victor will go straight into Tuesday's final while the loser will face the winner of Friday's eliminator between Gujurat Titans and Mumbai Indians on Sunday.
LSG have long been out of contention, finishing seventh, but Marsh ended the campaign with six fifties and a century, scoring 627 runs at 48.23 and a strike-rate of 163.70.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Josh Hazlewood declares he is in top form ahead of Australia vs South Africa World Test Championship final
Buoyed by an outstanding IPL, Australia quick Josh Hazlewood feels he is bowling better than at any point in his decorated career. Struck down by niggling injuries in recent years, Hazlewood could be forgiven for starting to taper, having already taken 279 wickets from 72 Tests. Follow every ball of the World Test Championship final with the ABC Sport live blog, and the live commentary between Australia and South Africa at Lord's. But the fit-again 34-year-old is going to give selectors significant headaches when picking the team for the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's, starting on Wednesday. It is an identical dilemma to two years ago when Scott Boland was chosen ahead of Hazlewood, who had been recovering from side issues, for the ultimately successful decider against India. "I was quite close last time, I just had more of an interrupted IPL leading into that and wasn't quite up to scratch," Hazlewood said on Saturday at Australia's training base in Beckenham. "But I feel in a much better place this time around, and I think in any format, my numbers over the last two years have been pretty good, so I've got a lot to fall back on. "Skill wise, I still feel like I'm bowling the best I have in my career and it's just a matter of the body holding up, which it has been in the last few months." Hazlewood managed just two Tests last summer, breaking down at the Gabba with a calf injury, as Australia won back the Border-Gavaskar trophy for the first time in a decade. The right-armer also missed the two-Test trip to Sri Lanka, played on spin-friendly pitches, to make sure he was ready to perform later in the year. Although he did suffer a slight shoulder injury, Hazlewood ultimately played a starring role in Royal Challengers Bangalore's breakthrough IPL title triumph last Tuesday. Hazlewood, who also won an IPL title with Chennai in 2021, finished with 22 wickets for the tournament — the third most by any bowler. Coming off a T20 workload, he has less than a week to get ready for his first Test since December. "I ticked over some good overs just before the (IPL) final in Ahmedabad, in different weather than (England's), so it was quite a tough session," Hazlewood said. "Then, every time you play a game in IPL, you're probably going to get almost seven or eight overs in when you factor in warm-ups." AAP


The Advertiser
6 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Veteran Aussie declares he's bowling better than ever
Buoyed by an outstanding IPL, Australia quick Josh Hazlewood feels he is bowling better than at any point in his decorated career. Struck down by niggling injuries in recent years, Hazlewood could be forgiven for starting to taper having already taken 279 wickets from 72 Tests. But the fit-again 34-year-old is going to give selectors significant headaches when picking the XI for the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's, starting on Wednesday. It is an identical dilemma to two years ago when Scott Boland was chosen ahead of Hazlewood, who had been recovering from side issues, for the ultimately successful decider against India. "I was quite close last time, I just had more of an interrupted IPL leading into that and wasn't quite up to scratch," Hazlewood said on Saturday at Australia's training base in Beckenham. "But I feel in much better place this time around, and I think in any format, my numbers over the last two years have been pretty good, so I've got a lot to fall back on. "Skill wise, I still feel like I'm bowling the best I have in my career and it's just a matter of the body holding up, which it has been in the last few months." Hazlewood managed just two Tests last summer, breaking down at the Gabba with a calf injury, as Australia won back the Border-Gavaskar trophy for the first time in a decade. The right-armer also missed the two-Test trip to Sri Lanka, played on spin-friendly pitches, to make sure he was ready to perform later in the year. Although he did suffer a slight shoulder injury, Hazlewood ultimately played a starring role in Royal Challengers Bangalore's breakthrough IPL title triumph last Tuesday. Hazlewood, who also won an IPL title with Chennai in 2021, finished with 22 wickets for the tournament - the third most by any bowler. Coming off a T20 workload, he has less than a week to get ready for his first Test since December. "I ticked over some good overs just before the (IPL) final in Ahmedabad, in different weather than (England's), so it was quite a tough session," Hazlewood said. "Then every time you play a game in IPL, you're probably going to get almost seven or eight overs in when you factor in warm ups." This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final. Buoyed by an outstanding IPL, Australia quick Josh Hazlewood feels he is bowling better than at any point in his decorated career. Struck down by niggling injuries in recent years, Hazlewood could be forgiven for starting to taper having already taken 279 wickets from 72 Tests. But the fit-again 34-year-old is going to give selectors significant headaches when picking the XI for the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's, starting on Wednesday. It is an identical dilemma to two years ago when Scott Boland was chosen ahead of Hazlewood, who had been recovering from side issues, for the ultimately successful decider against India. "I was quite close last time, I just had more of an interrupted IPL leading into that and wasn't quite up to scratch," Hazlewood said on Saturday at Australia's training base in Beckenham. "But I feel in much better place this time around, and I think in any format, my numbers over the last two years have been pretty good, so I've got a lot to fall back on. "Skill wise, I still feel like I'm bowling the best I have in my career and it's just a matter of the body holding up, which it has been in the last few months." Hazlewood managed just two Tests last summer, breaking down at the Gabba with a calf injury, as Australia won back the Border-Gavaskar trophy for the first time in a decade. The right-armer also missed the two-Test trip to Sri Lanka, played on spin-friendly pitches, to make sure he was ready to perform later in the year. Although he did suffer a slight shoulder injury, Hazlewood ultimately played a starring role in Royal Challengers Bangalore's breakthrough IPL title triumph last Tuesday. Hazlewood, who also won an IPL title with Chennai in 2021, finished with 22 wickets for the tournament - the third most by any bowler. Coming off a T20 workload, he has less than a week to get ready for his first Test since December. "I ticked over some good overs just before the (IPL) final in Ahmedabad, in different weather than (England's), so it was quite a tough session," Hazlewood said. "Then every time you play a game in IPL, you're probably going to get almost seven or eight overs in when you factor in warm ups." This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final. Buoyed by an outstanding IPL, Australia quick Josh Hazlewood feels he is bowling better than at any point in his decorated career. Struck down by niggling injuries in recent years, Hazlewood could be forgiven for starting to taper having already taken 279 wickets from 72 Tests. But the fit-again 34-year-old is going to give selectors significant headaches when picking the XI for the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's, starting on Wednesday. It is an identical dilemma to two years ago when Scott Boland was chosen ahead of Hazlewood, who had been recovering from side issues, for the ultimately successful decider against India. "I was quite close last time, I just had more of an interrupted IPL leading into that and wasn't quite up to scratch," Hazlewood said on Saturday at Australia's training base in Beckenham. "But I feel in much better place this time around, and I think in any format, my numbers over the last two years have been pretty good, so I've got a lot to fall back on. "Skill wise, I still feel like I'm bowling the best I have in my career and it's just a matter of the body holding up, which it has been in the last few months." Hazlewood managed just two Tests last summer, breaking down at the Gabba with a calf injury, as Australia won back the Border-Gavaskar trophy for the first time in a decade. The right-armer also missed the two-Test trip to Sri Lanka, played on spin-friendly pitches, to make sure he was ready to perform later in the year. Although he did suffer a slight shoulder injury, Hazlewood ultimately played a starring role in Royal Challengers Bangalore's breakthrough IPL title triumph last Tuesday. Hazlewood, who also won an IPL title with Chennai in 2021, finished with 22 wickets for the tournament - the third most by any bowler. Coming off a T20 workload, he has less than a week to get ready for his first Test since December. "I ticked over some good overs just before the (IPL) final in Ahmedabad, in different weather than (England's), so it was quite a tough session," Hazlewood said. "Then every time you play a game in IPL, you're probably going to get almost seven or eight overs in when you factor in warm ups." This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final.


Perth Now
8 hours ago
- Perth Now
Veteran Aussie declares he's bowling better than ever
Buoyed by an outstanding IPL, Australia quick Josh Hazlewood feels he is bowling better than at any point in his decorated career. Struck down by niggling injuries in recent years, Hazlewood could be forgiven for starting to taper having already taken 279 wickets from 72 Tests. But the fit-again 34-year-old is going to give selectors significant headaches when picking the XI for the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's, starting on Wednesday. It is an identical dilemma to two years ago when Scott Boland was chosen ahead of Hazlewood, who had been recovering from side issues, for the ultimately successful decider against India. "I was quite close last time, I just had more of an interrupted IPL leading into that and wasn't quite up to scratch," Hazlewood said on Saturday at Australia's training base in Beckenham. "But I feel in much better place this time around, and I think in any format, my numbers over the last two years have been pretty good, so I've got a lot to fall back on. "Skill wise, I still feel like I'm bowling the best I have in my career and it's just a matter of the body holding up, which it has been in the last few months." Hazlewood managed just two Tests last summer, breaking down at the Gabba with a calf injury, as Australia won back the Border-Gavaskar trophy for the first time in a decade. The right-armer also missed the two-Test trip to Sri Lanka, played on spin-friendly pitches, to make sure he was ready to perform later in the year. Although he did suffer a slight shoulder injury, Hazlewood ultimately played a starring role in Royal Challengers Bangalore's breakthrough IPL title triumph last Tuesday. Hazlewood, who also won an IPL title with Chennai in 2021, finished with 22 wickets for the tournament - the third most by any bowler. Coming off a T20 workload, he has less than a week to get ready for his first Test since December. "I ticked over some good overs just before the (IPL) final in Ahmedabad, in different weather than (England's), so it was quite a tough session," Hazlewood said. "Then every time you play a game in IPL, you're probably going to get almost seven or eight overs in when you factor in warm ups." This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final.